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Jan 31, 2013
01/13
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WJZ
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less, everything-- feeding kids educating kids, having enough jobs having stability, take care of the environment-- that really becomes a crucial thing and a society can get on a path to be like the u.s. . >> rose: give me an example of what excites you about what we're looking from mapping of the human genome and all the progress made since 2001 when it was announce bide people who had been working on it so hard? >> understanding the genome allows us to begin to understand how life works including how disease works. so taking, for example cancer and saying, okay that looks like breast cancer but it's-- there's many different types there. so the drugs used to treat it should be custom ides according to that pattern. you're starting to see the payoff on that. if you take plant-- because we can look at their d.n.a.-- we are beginning to understand plant diseases and saying okay how can we allow african farmers not have all these insects and diseases that lower their call the ral productivity to be about a fifth of what we have here in the united states. so the genetic revolution is going to give to
less, everything-- feeding kids educating kids, having enough jobs having stability, take care of the environment-- that really becomes a crucial thing and a society can get on a path to be like the u.s. . >> rose: give me an example of what excites you about what we're looking from mapping of the human genome and all the progress made since 2001 when it was announce bide people who had been working on it so hard? >> understanding the genome allows us to begin to understand how life...
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Jan 31, 2013
01/13
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KQED
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eye 87
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, everything-- feeding kids, educating kids, having enough jobs, having stability, take care of the environment-- that really becomes a crucial thing and a society can get on a path to be like the u.s. . >> rose: give me an example of what excites you about what we're looking from mapping of the human genome and all the progress made since 2001 when it was announce bide people who had been working on it so hard? >> understanding the genome allows us to begin to understand how life works, including how disease works. so taking, for example, cancer, and saying, okay, that looks like breast cancer but it's-- there's many different types there. so the drugs used to treat it should be custom ides according to that pattern. you're starting to see the payoff on that. if you take plant-- because we can look at their d.n.a.-- we are beginning to understand plant diseases and saying okay how can we allow african farmers not have all these insects and diseases that lower their call the ral productivity to be about a fifth of what we have here in the united states. so the genetic revolution is going to giv
, everything-- feeding kids, educating kids, having enough jobs, having stability, take care of the environment-- that really becomes a crucial thing and a society can get on a path to be like the u.s. . >> rose: give me an example of what excites you about what we're looking from mapping of the human genome and all the progress made since 2001 when it was announce bide people who had been working on it so hard? >> understanding the genome allows us to begin to understand how life...
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Jan 26, 2013
01/13
by
CSPAN2
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eye 69
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i asked him about the environment, and he said we don't have an environment. we can't afford one. and that was very much the story of the 1990s. the signature of the russian hydrocarbon industry is very, it's absolutely conventional up to this point. and their investment level and investment in renewables and unconventionals is at this point effectively minimal with one big exception, and that's nuclear power. if you consider that to be a virtuous renewable. as for solar, well, the agency that is in charge of solar power development is, in fact, subordinated to the nuclear power agency which tells you something. and so on. so this is a story that has not yet begun. it's something that the russians are going to have to become more conscious of if only for one very direct reason. the entire northern third of russia is permafrost, and it's melting. it's bubbling methane all over the world: and the consequences of a massive melting of permafrost are particularly serious in russia. the economic disruption alone, never mind the environmental consequences. so we're talking about big down
i asked him about the environment, and he said we don't have an environment. we can't afford one. and that was very much the story of the 1990s. the signature of the russian hydrocarbon industry is very, it's absolutely conventional up to this point. and their investment level and investment in renewables and unconventionals is at this point effectively minimal with one big exception, and that's nuclear power. if you consider that to be a virtuous renewable. as for solar, well, the agency that...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 25, 2013
01/13
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SFGTV2
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the environment is huge. it is stronger than willpower. surrounding yourself with artists, being in a culture where artists are driving, and where a huge amount of them is a healthy environment. >> you are making it safer. push, push. that is better. when i start thinking, i see it actually -- sometimes, i do not see it, but when i do, it is usually from the inside out. it is like watching something being spawned. you go in, and you begin to work, excavate, play with the dancers, and then things began to emerge. you may have a plan that this is what i want to create. here are the ideas i want to play with, but then, you go into the room, and there maybe some fertile ideas that are becoming manifest that are more interesting than the idea you had initially set out to plan. so there has to be this openness for spontaneity. also, a sense that regardless of the deadline, that you have tons of time so the you can keep your creativity alive and not cut it off and just go into old habits. it is a lot like listening. really listening to watch what
the environment is huge. it is stronger than willpower. surrounding yourself with artists, being in a culture where artists are driving, and where a huge amount of them is a healthy environment. >> you are making it safer. push, push. that is better. when i start thinking, i see it actually -- sometimes, i do not see it, but when i do, it is usually from the inside out. it is like watching something being spawned. you go in, and you begin to work, excavate, play with the dancers, and then...
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and local communities in the process but some towns and communities are standing up to this environment destroying corporate greed and say no even when the federal government says yes how you doing that and later in the show we'll have a your take my take live segment your chance to call in and ask a question or make a comment live on the air. you need to know this welcome to america half the nation lives right on the razor's edge a shocking new report out of the corporation for enterprise development finds the forty four percent of americans are just one financial shock away from complete ruin as nearly one hundred fifty million americans who don't have enough savings to keep them out of poverty for more than three months if they should suffer a job was an accident a sickness or some other financial shock and the recent study out of the consumer federation of america found that forty percent of all american households were. paid paycheck to paycheck with virtually no savings this is what's become of the wants of wanted american middle class after thirty years of trickle down reaganomic
and local communities in the process but some towns and communities are standing up to this environment destroying corporate greed and say no even when the federal government says yes how you doing that and later in the show we'll have a your take my take live segment your chance to call in and ask a question or make a comment live on the air. you need to know this welcome to america half the nation lives right on the razor's edge a shocking new report out of the corporation for enterprise...
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Jan 27, 2013
01/13
by
WUSA
tv
eye 58
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very different position than us, and they have the people who can go in there and live in that kind of environment. >> what does that mean? >> it means it's a much more difficult owe. >> no, what does it mean about the chinese you're talking about? >> they have a huge appetite for the natural resources. >> and we don't? >> oh no, we do, but we have other resources. the fact that this is something that gives them a primary call on a lot of resources of the region. they've put in a lot of money. we haven't been willing to do that. >> we have two reasons for being there. one, africa is a central front with al kay dan. number two, these resources that we really have not been attending to in any fashion resem bling the chinese. >> that's true. >> chinese will deal with anybody. they're right there in the sudan. they will go and deal with anybody. >> they were in africa early. >> they put cash on the barrel head. they're all over latin america, all over africa, john. they are dealing in a commercial mercantile way with these regimes, and we have a foreign policy that deals of of israel. meet yahir lapid
very different position than us, and they have the people who can go in there and live in that kind of environment. >> what does that mean? >> it means it's a much more difficult owe. >> no, what does it mean about the chinese you're talking about? >> they have a huge appetite for the natural resources. >> and we don't? >> oh no, we do, but we have other resources. the fact that this is something that gives them a primary call on a lot of resources of the...
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Jan 26, 2013
01/13
by
CNNW
tv
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we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ >>> welcome back to the second half of "outfront." we start with stories we care about where we focus with reporting from the front lines. today on the two-year anniversary of the egyptian revolution that ousted hosni mubarak from power, the streets were filled not with peace but with violence. protesters for and against president mohamed morsi clashed with police, at least seven died. morsi did not address the country but tweeted on twitter. he called on people to uphold the noble principles of the revolution. >>> apple is no longer the world's biggest company. the title belongs to exxonmobil. apple shares plummeted on the heels of disappointing earnings resulted and plunged over 12%. apple's market cap first passed exxonmobil on august 9th, 2011. it's been sitting pretty 18 months, s
we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ >>> welcome back to the second half of "outfront." we start with stories we care about where we focus with reporting from the front lines. today on the two-year anniversary of the egyptian revolution that ousted hosni mubarak from power,...
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Jan 28, 2013
01/13
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CNNW
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we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ >>> the problem is this -- >> all vision's workshops end with an assignment. >> you are writing a poetry memoir of who you are, what you are. >> for nio and becca, it's difficult. >> so what you feel inside, what you feel you are, how you identify yourself is what you are writing right now. >> i want you to spit from your heart. one more minute. wrap it up. we are going to make our way upstairs to the third floor to the drama studio. >> i don't have a race. i am now and forever my own race. i am tired of rabbit holing. why hide in the ground with everybody else when i can be myself and fly. [ applause ] >> black mother, white father, refuses to put herself in anybody else's box. >> when those white kids say i am one of them i can't say i feel welcome. black has always been the color of
we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ >>> the problem is this -- >> all vision's workshops end with an assignment. >> you are writing a poetry memoir of who you are, what you are. >> for nio and becca, it's difficult. >> so what you feel inside, what you feel you...
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Jan 27, 2013
01/13
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CSPAN
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eye 99
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as i said, i have a very serious threat environment in yemen. we have people getting over that wall at the cairo, doing damage, until we got them out. we had a serious threat against our embassy in tunis. had to make the president of tunisian descent reinforcements, which he did -- i had to beg the president of tunisia to send reinforcements. i really do not think anybody in the administration was really focused on that so much as try to figure out what we should be doing. thesn't involved with the talking points process. as i understand it, it was a typical interagency process where staff, including from the state department, participated to come up with the whatever was going to be made publicly available. it was not -- it is my understanding and the intelligence community is working with the appropriate committees to explain the whole process. >> i gather you still stand by the statement he made less than 24 hours that heavily armed militants insulted our compound. do you still stand by that? >> absolutely. >> congratulations and thank you fo
as i said, i have a very serious threat environment in yemen. we have people getting over that wall at the cairo, doing damage, until we got them out. we had a serious threat against our embassy in tunis. had to make the president of tunisian descent reinforcements, which he did -- i had to beg the president of tunisia to send reinforcements. i really do not think anybody in the administration was really focused on that so much as try to figure out what we should be doing. thesn't involved with...
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Jan 24, 2013
01/13
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MSNBCW
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of people through environments. so, one of the key aspects is ensuring that a property is beautiful, this it's functional, that it's welcoming and that it reduces the fears of crime, that it allows an environment where people take ownership and accountability for the properties that they occupy, either live, work or study in. >> kelly, really interesting and i don't mean to get too heady here but this reminded reading about it about the discipline and punish and talking about the design of the prison and the changes that the prison -- prison design had taken over the course of a century and the affect on the national psyche. and discipline through design. and what can happen there and i imagine it's very important to you to create space that is are safe but that don't feel oppressive and fortified. >> that's so true. it's -- you know, when you have an environment that is fortified that has these very blatant or obtrusive barriers or security features, what it causes is the people using the spaces to increase their a
of people through environments. so, one of the key aspects is ensuring that a property is beautiful, this it's functional, that it's welcoming and that it reduces the fears of crime, that it allows an environment where people take ownership and accountability for the properties that they occupy, either live, work or study in. >> kelly, really interesting and i don't mean to get too heady here but this reminded reading about it about the discipline and punish and talking about the design...
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Jan 26, 2013
01/13
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CSPAN
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eye 122
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we create an environment where they can do better or worse. we took a $3.6 billion budget deficit. as of this last week we have nearly half a million dollar surplus. [applause] after 12 years of property taxes coming up we are coming up on the third year where property tax will go down. and our overall tax burden is down. the unemployment rate in our state is now at just over 6.5%. that is not done because i created more jobs. it is because we created an environment in which it was more advantageous, particularly for small business leaders, to make investments to lead to more jobs. that is the third truth out of that brown bag common sense. i think most people understand that. the best way to create jobs is to empower the people, particularly small businesses, to be in a position to do that. those are the things that are relevant to where people are at. those same pundits who say we should change our principles talk about certain voting blocks and segments out there. i think the message we talked about, as long as we talk about it in terms of relevance -- in terms that are relevant
we create an environment where they can do better or worse. we took a $3.6 billion budget deficit. as of this last week we have nearly half a million dollar surplus. [applause] after 12 years of property taxes coming up we are coming up on the third year where property tax will go down. and our overall tax burden is down. the unemployment rate in our state is now at just over 6.5%. that is not done because i created more jobs. it is because we created an environment in which it was more...
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Jan 24, 2013
01/13
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CSPAN
tv
eye 83
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as i said, i have a very serious threat environment in yemen. we have people getting over that wall at the cairo, doing damage, until we got them out. we had a serious threat against our embassy in tunis. had to make the president of tunisian descent reinforcements, which he did -- i had to beg the president of tunisia to send reinforcements. i really do not think anybody in the administration was really focused on that so much as try to figure out what we should be doing. i wasn't involved with the the talking points process. as i understand it, it was a typical interagency process where staff, including from the state department, participated to come up with the whatever was going to be made publicly available. it was not -- it is my understanding and the intelligence community is working with the appropriate committees to explain the whole process. >> i gather you still stand by the statement he made less than 24 hours that heavily armed militants insulted our compound. the east coast and by that? >> absolutely. >> -- do you still stand by th
as i said, i have a very serious threat environment in yemen. we have people getting over that wall at the cairo, doing damage, until we got them out. we had a serious threat against our embassy in tunis. had to make the president of tunisian descent reinforcements, which he did -- i had to beg the president of tunisia to send reinforcements. i really do not think anybody in the administration was really focused on that so much as try to figure out what we should be doing. i wasn't involved...
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127
Jan 26, 2013
01/13
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CNNW
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eye 127
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we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ >>> we are back with tonight's "outer circle" where we reach out to sources around the world. we go to south africa where the search is on for thousands of crocodiles near the botswana border. rising floodwaters were threatening about 15,000 crocs on a breeding farm. the owners opened the farm's gates to relieve pressure. more than half the crocs or the loose. maybe that's good because they're not going to be turned into handbags. robyn curnow is following the story. >> reporter: fair to say the people who are trying to round up the crocs are doing it carefully. we understand the recapturing the mostly taking place at nighttime because crocodiles eyes grow red when lights reflected into them. in this largely farming rural area, residents are being warned not to try and capture the croc
we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ >>> we are back with tonight's "outer circle" where we reach out to sources around the world. we go to south africa where the search is on for thousands of crocodiles near the botswana border. rising floodwaters were threatening about...
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Jan 24, 2013
01/13
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LINKTV
tv
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environment where there's very rapid transmission of ideas, of concepts, and of risks. for example, if it's true that aids first arose somewhere in central africa, it would have been-- the world would have been a lot better off if that part of africa had had a better surveillance system and could have discovered this problem a year or more earlier than they did. that's just one example. this inter-relatedness of the world community was instrumental to the formation of the pan american health organization... even though the year was 1902. the intention was to provide a forum in which the countries could tell each other about what diseases were a problem, and agree on approaches that would allow for the control of the diseases-- these diseases-- without impeding trade. in those times, of course, was largely by ship. in 1948, the concept expanded with the formation of the world health organization, and six regional offices that included paho. some of its efforts are focused toward the eradication of single diseases like polio, using thsalk d th. david bennett: with these t
environment where there's very rapid transmission of ideas, of concepts, and of risks. for example, if it's true that aids first arose somewhere in central africa, it would have been-- the world would have been a lot better off if that part of africa had had a better surveillance system and could have discovered this problem a year or more earlier than they did. that's just one example. this inter-relatedness of the world community was instrumental to the formation of the pan american health...
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Jan 28, 2013
01/13
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LINKTV
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environment experts believe lawmakers are taking the situation seriously. >> there is a political ownership of that change. the government is certainly more responsive, but in terms of action, and implementation is a problem and there is a lot of slack, even now. >> whenever the experts say, it is people with breathing problems to suffer the most. this man has had asthma all his life and his condition gets worse. >> we cannot inhale that. we're not comfortable breathing that air. i usually go to the park in the morning but i don't feel like it when there is smog. >> local authorities are planning to place electric signboards to warn drivers about pollution and encourage them to keep their cars at home. activists say it's a start but what they want to see is a better public transport policy and a secure cycling lane it to encourage drivers to leave their cars at home and keep pollution and smog at bay. >> the president of venezuela remained in cuba where he has been treated for cancer. a spokesman says he's overcome a respiratory infection and is still politically active. >> he has been care
environment experts believe lawmakers are taking the situation seriously. >> there is a political ownership of that change. the government is certainly more responsive, but in terms of action, and implementation is a problem and there is a lot of slack, even now. >> whenever the experts say, it is people with breathing problems to suffer the most. this man has had asthma all his life and his condition gets worse. >> we cannot inhale that. we're not comfortable breathing that...
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Jan 25, 2013
01/13
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CSPAN
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it is a different environment that requires a different level of physical stamina. we want to make sure we get the standards right. we don't want to over engineer them either, they ought to be fair. then we allow individuals of any sex to compete for the position. >> is it just physical standards? >> no, it not just physical standards. the standards we have for occupational -- for these military occupations or the military calls them ratings they including the from mental standards to physical standards. but physical standards are the one that people focus on. >> what about privacy? >> we can fix out privacy. -- we can figure out privacy. we figured that out right from the start. by the way, desert shield, desert storm 1991 h we did live in that environment where we were somewhat in the zests and we figured out privacy. -- we were somewhat nomadic and we figured out privacy. we can do that. >> the fact is, women are now in the ranks and that was the concern of the time. but we've been able to adapt to that situation. women are fighter pilots, air force, navy, have m
it is a different environment that requires a different level of physical stamina. we want to make sure we get the standards right. we don't want to over engineer them either, they ought to be fair. then we allow individuals of any sex to compete for the position. >> is it just physical standards? >> no, it not just physical standards. the standards we have for occupational -- for these military occupations or the military calls them ratings they including the from mental standards...
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incapable of managing this economy in such a way as to effectively transition to a higher yield normalized environment they let instead the bond bubble built of three hundred year exchange now the bond pocalypse is upon us and russia quite smartly and china and other countries around the world are getting ahead of this by buying gold and they're buying gold aggressively as we've been saying that they should do yes now the first stage of this financial war was characterized by the fact that the banks didn't trust each other there was no interbank lending and now this sage of central banks and governments not trusting each other is of course like the first great depression the previous great depression anyway you know that starts that lead to world war is now the bank of russia has built up the world's fourth largest foreign reserves worth five hundred thirty billion dollars and ten percent of that is in gold. that's right and as we head into a hot war from the cold war which is a follow on to the cold war and so we're going to see the fireworks start to explode here shortly and of course the music is s
incapable of managing this economy in such a way as to effectively transition to a higher yield normalized environment they let instead the bond bubble built of three hundred year exchange now the bond pocalypse is upon us and russia quite smartly and china and other countries around the world are getting ahead of this by buying gold and they're buying gold aggressively as we've been saying that they should do yes now the first stage of this financial war was characterized by the fact that the...
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and local communities in the process but some towns and communities are standing up to this environment destroying corporate greed and say no even when the federal government says yes i'm doing that and later in the show we'll have a your take my take live segment your chance to call in and ask a question or make a comment live on the air. you need to know this welcome to america half the nation lives right on the razor's edge a shocking new report out of the corporation for enterprise development finds that forty four percent of americans are just one financial shock away from complete ruin as nearly one hundred fifty million americans who don't have enough savings to keep them out of poverty for more than three months if they should suffer a job loss an accident a sickness or some other financial shock another recent study out of the consumer federation of america found that forty percent of all american households live eight paycheck to paycheck with virtually no savings this is what's become of the wants of wanted american middle class after thirty years of trickle down reaganomics
and local communities in the process but some towns and communities are standing up to this environment destroying corporate greed and say no even when the federal government says yes i'm doing that and later in the show we'll have a your take my take live segment your chance to call in and ask a question or make a comment live on the air. you need to know this welcome to america half the nation lives right on the razor's edge a shocking new report out of the corporation for enterprise...
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tv
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incapable of managing this economy in such a way as to effectively transition to a higher yield normalized environment they let instead the bond bubble built to three hundred year exchange now the bond pocalypse is upon us and russia quite smartly and china and other countries around the world are getting ahead of this by buying gold and they're buying gold aggressively as we've been saying that they should do yes now the first stage of this financial war was characterized by the fact that the banks didn't trust each other there was no interbank lending and now this sage of central banks and governments not trusting each other is of course like the first great depression the previous great depression anyway you know that starts to lead to world war is now the bank of russia has built up the world's fourth largest foreign. reserves worth five hundred thirty billion dollars and ten percent of that is in gold. that's right and as we head into a hot war from the cold war which is a follow on to the cold war and so we're going to see the fireworks start to explode here shortly and of course the music is st
incapable of managing this economy in such a way as to effectively transition to a higher yield normalized environment they let instead the bond bubble built to three hundred year exchange now the bond pocalypse is upon us and russia quite smartly and china and other countries around the world are getting ahead of this by buying gold and they're buying gold aggressively as we've been saying that they should do yes now the first stage of this financial war was characterized by the fact that the...
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incapable of managing this economy in such a way as to effectively transition to a higher yield normalized environment they let instead the bond bubble built of three hundred year exchange now the bond pocalypse is upon us and russia quite smartly and china and other countries around the world are getting ahead of this by buying gold and they're buying gold aggressively as we've been saying that they should do yes now the first stage of this financial war was characterized by the fact that the banks didn't trust each other there was no interbank lending and now this. central banks and governments not trusting each other is of course like the first great depression the previous great depression anyway you know that starts to lead to world war is now the bank of russia has built up the world's fourth largest foreign. reserves worth five hundred thirty billion dollars and ten percent of that is in gold. that's right and as we head into a hot war from the cold war which is a follow on to the cold war and so we're going to see the fireworks start to explode here shortly and of course the music is stopping
incapable of managing this economy in such a way as to effectively transition to a higher yield normalized environment they let instead the bond bubble built of three hundred year exchange now the bond pocalypse is upon us and russia quite smartly and china and other countries around the world are getting ahead of this by buying gold and they're buying gold aggressively as we've been saying that they should do yes now the first stage of this financial war was characterized by the fact that the...
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incapable of managing this economy in such a way as to effectively transition to a higher yield normalized environment they let instead the bond bubble built of three hundred year exchange now the bond pocalypse is upon us and russia quite smartly and china and other countries around the world are getting ahead of this by buying gold and they're buying gold aggressively as we've been saying that they should do yes now the first stage of this financial war was characterized by the fact that the banks didn't trust each other there was no interbank lending and now this. central banks and governments not trusting each other is of course like the first great depression the previous great depression anyway you know that starts to lead to world war is now the bank of russia has built up the world's fourth largest foreign. reserves worth five hundred thirty billion dollars and ten percent of that is in gold. that's right and as we head into a hot war from the cold war which is a follow on to the cold war and so we're going to see the fireworks start to explode here shortly and of course the music is stopping
incapable of managing this economy in such a way as to effectively transition to a higher yield normalized environment they let instead the bond bubble built of three hundred year exchange now the bond pocalypse is upon us and russia quite smartly and china and other countries around the world are getting ahead of this by buying gold and they're buying gold aggressively as we've been saying that they should do yes now the first stage of this financial war was characterized by the fact that the...
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Jan 29, 2013
01/13
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CNBC
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in this environment and it's harder to provide guaranteed returns, is that a declining revenue stream? >> the problem with life insurers is a lot of their products they sell are discretionary. as people have less income and maybe they can't pay their mortgages, firstly, the top line is going to go down. secondly, as you say, a lot of life insurance profit is dictated by the return. as returns are low, property is under pressure. >> they have sold a lot of structure products to higher end investors. are those in decline, as well? >> yeah. i think a lot of complex analogies. >> and we have sovereignty two coming up which they keep fighting against. do we know what the full impact is going to be? >> it's still in debate. so i think the impact will be an improvement in risk management across the industry. that's a big win in the industry for a whole. they have more on the guarantee they offer and a more wholistic regime should make the industry stronger. >> and in the meantime, we can figure out whether the uk is leaving the eu. >> and then the uk has to worry about selling their products
in this environment and it's harder to provide guaranteed returns, is that a declining revenue stream? >> the problem with life insurers is a lot of their products they sell are discretionary. as people have less income and maybe they can't pay their mortgages, firstly, the top line is going to go down. secondly, as you say, a lot of life insurance profit is dictated by the return. as returns are low, property is under pressure. >> they have sold a lot of structure products to...
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we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ growing up, we didn't have u-verse. we couldn't record four shows at the same time. in my day, you were lucky if you could record two shows. and if mom was recording her dumb show and dad was recording his dumb show then, by george, that's all we watched. and we liked it! today's kids got it so good. [ male announcer ] get u-verse tv with a total home dvr included free for life. only $29 a month for six months. rethink possible. >>> developing news now out of san jose where a man was found stabbed to death. police tell us a man suffering from several stab wounds was found near south side drive and hope street. he was taken to the hospital where he died. several male suspects stabbed the man and then took off. at this point no arrests or i.d. on that victim. >>> residents of the central
we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ growing up, we didn't have u-verse. we couldn't record four shows at the same time. in my day, you were lucky if you could record two shows. and if mom was recording her dumb show and dad was recording his dumb show then, by george, that's all we watched....
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Jan 27, 2013
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the great conservationist movement in this country, which is what climate is about, which is but the environment was about what led by who? tey roevel wasmbrad byen le russell train, great republicans. it was a terrific republican sense of leadership. nelson that, the rockefeller. >> richard nixon? >> clean air act. i mean, the man that took the lead out of the air. richard nixon. the man who saved the waters of this country, richard nixon. the last great liberal president this country had. i would just like to see as rise above this pattern -- petty partisan bickering that i hear in this panel. >> ts speech ld outhe thing that we have deal with. the things the government has to be involved in. the air, the water goes from state to state, city to city. one place cannot do it. it has to be the business -- the regulation of how you protect with all of that has to be the business of the federal government. >> could i get half a minute of the bottle? cap and trade worked well for acid rain. acid rain stays in our country. i am not against regulated carbon. if you can get china and india to do someth
the great conservationist movement in this country, which is what climate is about, which is but the environment was about what led by who? tey roevel wasmbrad byen le russell train, great republicans. it was a terrific republican sense of leadership. nelson that, the rockefeller. >> richard nixon? >> clean air act. i mean, the man that took the lead out of the air. richard nixon. the man who saved the waters of this country, richard nixon. the last great liberal president this...
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Jan 25, 2013
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many of whom served in hostile environments. unfortunately, threats to americans abroad are growing particularly those threats are growing in north africa and the attacks last week in algeria again show the nature of the danger. i support having a wide diplomatic presence. we can't retreat. as you for recognizing your testimony. but it has to be done with the safety of our personnel foremost in mind. this committee intends to work with your department in a bipartisan way. and to work to improve security. every organization has its shortcomings to review with welcome them being highlighted, but it's this committee's job to get answers to the tough questions. our goal is to identify where the state department management broke down, thus failing to protect our people than benghazi to it is clear the problem wasn't confined to a few individuals. the accountability review board convened by you, madam secretary, found a, quote, systemic failures and leadership and management deficiencies at sea levels within two bureaus in the state d
many of whom served in hostile environments. unfortunately, threats to americans abroad are growing particularly those threats are growing in north africa and the attacks last week in algeria again show the nature of the danger. i support having a wide diplomatic presence. we can't retreat. as you for recognizing your testimony. but it has to be done with the safety of our personnel foremost in mind. this committee intends to work with your department in a bipartisan way. and to work to improve...